The Crazed Spruce December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 Quote A disillusioned Avery seeks career inspiration from his extended family at "Murphy in the Morning"; the team tries to salvage a major story that hinges on a source in the Middle East who has gone silent. Link to comment
Annber03 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 "You watch 'Dancing with the Stars'?" "I will watch any show that humiliates both Tucker Carlson and Rick Perry." Murphy is my spirit animal :D. And I continue to adore Avery bonding with Benny. But awwwwwww, that ending. I do understand his eagerness to help, for all sorts of reasons. I liked the team sharing their stories about how journalists were able to bring attention to important stories (I've heard that Cronkite story before), and it's clear his heart's in the right place and all. But damn, that's a hell of a risky thing for him to do. Here's hoping his decision will be worth it. On a lighter note, I liked Murphy trying to confront that general and following him around. 23 Link to comment
UYI December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 I haven't been reading spoilers, so my guess is that, if the show (God willing!) gets renewed for a second season, Avery will return from Afghanistan with a restored reputation in TV news and a shot at a comeback. I don't want anything to happen to Murphy's baby. :'( I loved Corky's Monday and Tuesday sweaters. :) Benny is stealing the show now. He HAS to stay if there's a season 2! 24 Link to comment
Empress1 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 Nothing better happen to Avery! My brother's best friend did some investigative work in Afghanistan. His parents were worried sick. (He's fine. Wrote a book!) And Murphy knows firsthand how dangerous it is. Of course she's scared. Benny's bell trick is SO CUTE. 20 Link to comment
Irlandesa December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 Just now, Empress1 said: Benny's bell trick is SO CUTE. It was. But if Murphy really didn't want him td keep ringing, pick up the bell! If you saw the previews, Spoiler they kind of gave away what happens with Avery since he was at home, on the couch, wearing a hat. 8 Link to comment
Bronzedog December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 1 minute ago, Empress1 said: Nothing better happen to Avery! Benny's bell trick is SO CUTE. I’ve known a couple of people that have trained their dogs to use bells. In both cases, it started out as a house breaking technique and ended with the dog using its owner as its personal butler. Want someone to take you out? Ring the bell! Want attention? Ring the bell! Want someone to fuss over you while trying to figure out what’s wrong? Ring the bell! Etc. 1 17 Link to comment
Kohola3 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 "Benny calling for a bellhop". Hee! 17 Link to comment
Empress1 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 24 minutes ago, Bronzedog said: I’ve known a couple of people that have trained their dogs to use bells. In both cases, it started out as a house breaking technique and ended with the dog using its owner as its personal butler. Want someone to take you out? Ring the bell! Want attention? Ring the bell! Want someone to fuss over you while trying to figure out what’s wrong? Ring the bell! Etc. Yeah, I could see how it could get annoying quickly! 4 Link to comment
Popular Post giovannif7 December 14, 2018 Popular Post Share December 14, 2018 I got the biggest stupid grin on my face when I realized not only was the mural behind Avery's bed one of Eldin's (I'm assuming that was young Avery's face painted in the helmet of the figure in the space suit), but that Avery had a photo of the two of them prominently displayed on his headboard. It drove home the point to me that Eldin is Avery's father figure. 56 Link to comment
Annber03 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 I was enjoying looking at all the stuff on his walls and whatnot, too. He's got a cool-looking room. 8 Link to comment
Popular Post Bastet December 14, 2018 Popular Post Share December 14, 2018 I don't feel well and am about to conk out, so I couldn't properly appreciate this episode, but I still laughed at: - “I will watch any show that humiliates both Tucker Carlson and Rick Perry.” - Avery flashing back to when he was six, and Corky would lure him into her office with toys to keep him from bugging them at work - “Figure out whatever the hell you want, and I will give you whatever the hell I’ve got.” - Murphy thinking she trained Avery to get up for school, only to find out he trained her to bring him breakfast in bed And, aww, Eldin’s mural – complete with his signature – and his picture in Avery’s room is almost as sweet as Avery and Murphy with the adorable dog (especially Avery's continued sheer glee over the little guy). That legit choked me up; best nod to Eldin since the season premiere. I like the discussion of how shuttering international bureaus has affected journalism; boy howdy. Yay, more Jim next week! Boo, last episode of the season (and maybe of the revival, period). 32 Link to comment
Anela December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 I loved this. I'm not feeling well either, so I watched this a little while ago, and laughed out loud, I don't know how many times. That dog is the cutest! Loved him repeatedly hitting that bell, but a good reminder to not train mine to do that. I also liked them talking about the good old days, being blindfolded and taken to an undisclosed location. LOL. Corky's tangent on packing made me laugh, too. I like how they just humour her. 9 Link to comment
Mystery December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 7 hours ago, Annber03 said: On a lighter note, I liked Murphy trying to confront that general and following him around. That was my favorite part. I don't think that reputable news organizations should allow shills to spout lies and evade questions. If they won't answer questions, they shouldn't be allowed on. I applaud Murphy's "you WILL answer my questions" attitude. I laughed at Avery's reminiscing about how they treated him as a kid. I've said it before, but they did such a good job making him exactly the child that Murphy Brown (and Eldin and Frank and Corky and Miles) raised. Still glad to see him bonding with the dog. All of the "how long has the war in Afghanistan been going on" talk reminded me that the new Sherlock TV series rebooted with Dr. Watson coming home from Afghanistan a hundred years after the original Conan Doyle stories. That war is timeless. Or endless. 6 hours ago, giovannif7 said: I got the biggest stupid grin on my face when I realized not only was the mural behind Avery's bed one of Eldin's (I'm assuming that was young Avery's face painted in the helmet of the figure in the space suit), but that Avery had a photo of the two of them prominently displayed on his headboard. It drove home the point to me that Eldin is Avery's father figure. Thank you for the screen grab! That was so fun to look at. Sadly, I think that the dog emotes more than Candice Bergen does. 8 Link to comment
madfortv December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 I enjoyed Bennie's new trick and seeing Avery's room. The scene I liked the best was hearing about the old days as they sat around the table in Phil's bar while Avery took it all in. This is the only episodic show I watch and I am really going to miss it. The relationship between Murphy and Avery continues to be the best part of the show. I like how Murphy dresses in a more comfortable style at home, which makes it more realistic. The actor who plays Frank has become more relaxed and is doing a great job with his line delivery. I always liked the actress playing Phyllis but don't care for her role on this show. 8 Link to comment
Empress1 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 1 hour ago, madfortv said: The scene I liked the best was hearing about the old days as they sat around the table in Phil's bar while Avery took it all in. Me too - and it did sound better, TBH, particularly the part about Cronkite and the Vietnam war. 9 Link to comment
Tanichka December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 Soooo predictable. No laughs, either. The only sitcom where I can sit and not even crack a smile. I will say that the dog is a cutie. Link to comment
GHScorpiosRule December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 Loved Murphy chasing after the general--Very Mark Wallace-ish! And did the moron think he was on the Wolf network where he wouldn't be asked any tough questions? Man, I was really feeling Avery's pain, and actually was miffed on his behalf that none of his uncles and auntie wanted him anywhere near them. What? Did they think he'd steal their story and go running back to Wolf? Benny makes everything better! I loved how once he discovered how to ring the bell, he kept doing it over and over again! And his whimpers got to me. Hell. I wish I lived in a place that allowed pets. I would SO adopt a doggie or two. I LOVED Frank and Murphy retelling the stories of what journalists used to do to get a story. I remember the Cronkite story well from documentaries I've watched. I still CURSE the day when Greedy Corporations bought the news organizations and it was no longer reporting the news, but RATINGS!!!!! And then the advent of tabloid news on television. Sigh. Murphy broke my heart with that sad look on her face, trying not to cry when Avery left. I just love those two! 10 hours ago, Annber03 said: "You watch 'Dancing with the Stars'?" "I will watch any show that humiliates both Tucker Carlson and Rick Perry." Murphy is my spirit animal :D. And I continue to adore Avery bonding with Benny. I 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 at that! 9 hours ago, giovannif7 said: I got the biggest stupid grin on my face when I realized not only was the mural behind Avery's bed one of Eldin's (I'm assuming that was young Avery's face painted in the helmet of the figure in the space suit), but that Avery had a photo of the two of them prominently displayed on his headboard. It drove home the point to me that Eldin is Avery's father figure. Oh man!!! It just makes me so so sad that Robert Pastorelli is no longer with us. 18 Link to comment
Kohola3 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 9 hours ago, giovannif7 said: I got the biggest stupid grin on my face when I realized not only was the mural behind Avery's bed one of Eldin's (I'm assuming that was young Avery's face painted in the helmet of the figure in the space suit), but that Avery had a photo of the two of them prominently displayed on his headboard. It drove home the point to me that Eldin is Avery's father figure. Thanks for posting that. I didn't catch any of the details until you put it up! Aw, Eldin, how we miss you. 19 Link to comment
proserpina65 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 ARGH!!!!! I fell asleep again!! What happened after the scene where Avery was helping out at Phil's and the gang walked in talking about Murphy's source being awol? Link to comment
GHScorpiosRule December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 Just now, proserpina65 said: ARGH!!!!! I fell asleep again!! What happened after the scene where Avery was helping out at Phil's and the gang walked in talking about Murphy's source being awol? Frank and Murphy talked about how during their hey day, how journalists would dig out the stories themselves; would make contacts; how there were news bureaus to know who to reach out to, etc. How Cronkite went to Vietnam and when he came back, told the world "we were losing" and how that impacted President Johnson. When journalists had RESPECT. Instead of today, with social media and phones, and blah, blah. It was very, very good. And that gave Avery the boost to go to Afghanistan to suss out Murphy's source. I'm leaving a lot out, but just watch it on demand. Or if you can, dvr or TiVo it. 7 Link to comment
proserpina65 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 1 minute ago, GHScorpiosRule said: Frank and Murphy talked about how during their hey day, how journalists would dig out the stories themselves; would make contacts; how there were news bureaus to know who to reach out to, etc. How Cronkite went to Vietnam and when he came back, told the world "we were losing" and how that impacted President Johnson. When journalists had RESPECT. Instead of today, with social media and phones, and blah, blah. It was very, very good. And that gave Avery the boost to go to Afghanistan to suss out Murphy's source. I'm leaving a lot out, but just watch it on demand. Or if you can, dvr or TiVo it. Thanks, that gives me the gist of it. I don't have on demand, dvr or TiVo. I have a vcr, but that was taping something else, unfortunately. I'll see the episode if they ever re-run it. 2 Link to comment
ItCouldBeWorse December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 If you have cable, you can watch it at cbs.com. 2 Link to comment
Chaos Theory December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 (edited) I’ve neVer really liked pets on tv shows unless they are vital to the show. I view them like moonwalking bears. People are so focused on how cute the dog is that Murphy could have been murdered by Avery and the scene flashed to a “to be continuned” message and half the audience would be like “wait what...what I miss?” Will the puppy be a vital emotional companion for Murphy now that Avery is gone? Who knows. It could just as easily disappear next episode and half the audience will be more concerned about a dog that has been on the show for two episodes then Avery. Edited December 14, 2018 by Chaos Theory Link to comment
AntiBeeSpray December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 41 minutes ago, Chaos Theory said: I’ve neVer really liked pets on tv shows unless they are vital to the show. I view them like moonwalking bears. People are so focused on how cute the dog is that Murphy could have been murdered by Avery and the scene flashed to a “to be continuned” message and half the audience would be like “wait what...what I miss?” Will the puppy be a vital emotional companion for Murphy now that Avery is gone? Who knows. It could just as easily disappear next episode and half the audience will be more concerned about a dog that has been on the show for two episodes then Avery. He's a series regular, according to Diane English. So he won't be disappearing. Loved last night's episode and am looking forward to the season finale. 12 Link to comment
chitowngirl December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 Murphy chasing the General would have been funnier if she would have been wearing the PJ bottoms and slippers she has been known to wear while on air. Joe Regalbuto directed this episode! 16 Link to comment
Driad December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 1 hour ago, ItCouldBeWorse said: If you have cable, you can watch it at cbs.com. If you don't have cable, you can watch it there too (with commercials) starting the day after broadcast. Avery Sr. (Murphy's mom) probably worried a lot when Murphy was a journalist in dangerous places. So Murphy has been on both sides now. I'm a bit disappointed she didn't mention it. 9 Link to comment
Snow Apple December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 My cold heart thawed when Bennie turned his little head to looked back at Murphy after Avery walked out the door. 16 Link to comment
willowk December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 very good episode. So often dogs overwhelm a show, but not Benny. I like Avery going to the war zone, and if there is a season 2 would be great to continue with him making trips abroad except that I want him to still be a big part of the show. Loved Murphy's "I'm bionic" with her 2 hip replacements and Phyllis telling Frank that she won't bring him a menu as it hasn't changed in 40 years so he should know it by heart. this show has been a bright spot on my Thursday evenings. 23 Link to comment
mammaM December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 Benny needs his own show. Everyone's thinking it, I just said it outloud. And I loved "Avey" and "aunt" Corky, you know she was ready to dump him in her office😂 16 Link to comment
iMonrey December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 I thought this episode perfectly encapsulated what's wrong with the show. The dialogue was so clunky and so contrived I cringed. That entire scene with Murphy, Frank and Corky sitting around at Phil's reminiscing about the good old days of journalism was like something you'd see in a sixth-grade play, where the characters each stand up and explain the meaning of Thanksgiving to the audience. The story about LBJ saying if he lost Walter Cronkite he lost the country is something I've heard a dozen times in my life. To work that into the dialogue as though it were news to anyone felt so didactic and condescending. I mean, everyone at that table knows that story like the back of their hand . . . why would anyone recite it as though nobody had ever heard it? Too much of what the characters are saying sounds deliberately instructive, it's like they are directly channeling liberal commentary that's so stale and obvious it feels totally unnecessary. I don't need this show to teach me a lesson in civics or state the bleeding obvious about the current administration. I enjoyed the bits with the dog and that's about it - when the script veers off its moralizing agenda it feels more like it used to back in the day. But most of the time, it's objective is about as subtle as a ton of bricks to the head. Link to comment
Popular Post AntiBeeSpray December 14, 2018 Popular Post Share December 14, 2018 (edited) 1 hour ago, iMonrey said: I thought this episode perfectly encapsulated what's wrong with the show. The dialogue was so clunky and so contrived I cringed. That entire scene with Murphy, Frank and Corky sitting around at Phil's reminiscing about the good old days of journalism was like something you'd see in a sixth-grade play, where the characters each stand up and explain the meaning of Thanksgiving to the audience. The story about LBJ saying if he lost Walter Cronkite he lost the country is something I've heard a dozen times in my life. To work that into the dialogue as though it were news to anyone felt so didactic and condescending. I mean, everyone at that table knows that story like the back of their hand . . . why would anyone recite it as though nobody had ever heard it? Too much of what the characters are saying sounds deliberately instructive, it's like they are directly channeling liberal commentary that's so stale and obvious it feels totally unnecessary. I don't need this show to teach me a lesson in civics or state the bleeding obvious about the current administration. I enjoyed the bits with the dog and that's about it - when the script veers off its moralizing agenda it feels more like it used to back in the day. But most of the time, it's objective is about as subtle as a ton of bricks to the head. Some of the younger generation may have not. It's not all about your generation (this is meant in a general sense). I can see why it can be viewed that way in terms of the dialogue, but in a way I can see why it needed to be mentioned. History is very soon forgotten. Edited December 14, 2018 by AntiBeeSpray 1 39 Link to comment
Sarah 103 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 15 hours ago, Annber03 said: that's a hell of a risky thing for him to do. Here's hoping his decision will be worth it. 15 hours ago, UYI said: I haven't been reading spoilers, so my guess is that, if the show (God willing!) gets renewed for a second season, Avery will return from Afghanistan with a restored reputation in TV news and a shot at a comeback. I don't want anything to happen to Murphy's baby. :'( I loved Corky's Monday and Tuesday sweaters. :) Benny is stealing the show now. He HAS to stay if there's a season 2! We're in TVLand. He'll be fine. I'm willing to bet money he'll show up on New Year's Eve with a big story, maybe not what he was looking for, but something that will set up him for a comeback. Avery is one of the best things about the show and a fan favorite. I don't think they'll kill him off, this isn't that kind of show. Corky's Monday and Tuesday sweaters reminded me of a 1950s cheerleader for some reason. 14 hours ago, giovannif7 said: I got the biggest stupid grin on my face when I realized not only was the mural behind Avery's bed one of Eldin's (I'm assuming that was young Avery's face painted in the helmet of the figure in the space suit), but that Avery had a photo of the two of them prominently displayed on his headboard. It drove home the point to me that Eldin is Avery's father figure. I hadn't noticed all of those details. Thank you so much for posting the screencap and telling us what to look for. This is awesome. I can see Avery as he got older wanting something more grown-up than what Eldin had originally painted in the nursery (something historically and socially relevant, but with bunnies). I can picture Avery and Eldin having a very serious discussion about Avery wanted and Eldin delivering. Eldin sadly looking at the nursery struggling to deal with the fact that Avery is getting older and no longer a baby. 6 Link to comment
Annber03 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 1 minute ago, Sarah 103 said: We're in TVLand. He'll be fine. I'm willing to bet money he'll show up on New Year's Eve with a big story, maybe not what he was looking for, but something that will set up him for a comeback. Avery is one of the best things about the show and a fan favorite. I don't think they'll kill him off, this isn't that kind of show. Corky's Monday and Tuesday sweaters reminded me of a 1950s cheerleader for some reason. Oh, yeah, I'm not worried about him being killed off or anything like that. I was mainly thinking more in terms of how his actions might impact Murphy's story and everything related to it, as well as how any danger he might encounter could affect him going forward, too. 3 Link to comment
Popular Post Kohola3 December 14, 2018 Popular Post Share December 14, 2018 43 minutes ago, AntiBeeSpray said: History is very soon forgotten. I was at a fundraiser for Honor Flight (takes WWII vets to see their memorial in Washington for free) and a 30 something asked me 1) who the US fought against in WWII and 2) was WWII before or after Vietnam. Appalling and sad to think these world changing wars are so easily forgotten. I bet 90% of those who didn't live those nightmare years of Vietnam have no knowledge of Cronkite and his impact on that war. After all, it wasn't on Facebook or Twitter so how important could it have been? 33 Link to comment
Annber03 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 4 minutes ago, Kohola3 said: I was at a fundraiser for Honor Flight (takes WWII vets to see their memorial in Washington for free) and a 30 something asked me 1) who the US fought against in WWII and 2) was WWII before or after Vietnam. Appalling and sad to think these world changing wars are so easily forgotten. ...oh, dear. As a fellow 30-something, that's just plain embarrassing. 8 Link to comment
iMonrey December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 Quote Some of the younger generation may have not. It's not all about your generation (this is meant in a general sense). I can see why it can be viewed that way in terms of the dialogue, but in a way I can see why it needed to be mentioned. History is very soon forgotten. Yes but that means the impact of this story will be utterly lost on a generation that has no idea who Walter Cronkite was. Or for that matter, what the Vietnam war was all about. The show is constantly preaching to the choir in an overly obvious, teacher-like manner. The characters are just spitting out things the viewer has already said or thought of themselves, because let's face it, if your politics lean to the right you probably aren't watching this show. 2 Link to comment
Tanichka December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 46 minutes ago, iMonrey said: The show is constantly preaching to the choir in an overly obvious, teacher-like manner. The characters are just spitting out things the viewer has already said or thought of themselves, because let's face it, if your politics lean to the right you probably aren't watching this show. That’s what I’ve been saying! Political is fine, as long as it’s funny, which this show is not. The ‘choir’ wants humor! 2 Link to comment
Kohola3 December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 1 hour ago, iMonrey said: Yes but that means the impact of this story will be utterly lost on a generation that has no idea who Walter Cronkite was. Or for that matter, what the Vietnam war was all about. So they watch the show and learn. That's the point. 23 Link to comment
Anela December 14, 2018 Share December 14, 2018 (edited) 3 hours ago, iMonrey said: I thought this episode perfectly encapsulated what's wrong with the show. The dialogue was so clunky and so contrived I cringed. That entire scene with Murphy, Frank and Corky sitting around at Phil's reminiscing about the good old days of journalism was like something you'd see in a sixth-grade play, where the characters each stand up and explain the meaning of Thanksgiving to the audience. The story about LBJ saying if he lost Walter Cronkite he lost the country is something I've heard a dozen times in my life. To work that into the dialogue as though it were news to anyone felt so didactic and condescending. I mean, everyone at that table knows that story like the back of their hand . . . why would anyone recite it as though nobody had ever heard it? Too much of what the characters are saying sounds deliberately instructive, it's like they are directly channeling liberal commentary that's so stale and obvious it feels totally unnecessary. I don't need this show to teach me a lesson in civics or state the bleeding obvious about the current administration. I enjoyed the bits with the dog and that's about it - when the script veers off its moralizing agenda it feels more like it used to back in the day. But most of the time, it's objective is about as subtle as a ton of bricks to the head. That's what happens when people reminisce. They bring up things they all remember, and tell the same stories, over and over - because they were important to them, in some way. And Walter Cronkite was mentioned on facebook recently, as "real news". I was born after the Vietnam war ended (oh, actually just two weeks before: I looked it up), but remember the news anchors in England. Edited December 14, 2018 by Anela 18 Link to comment
Popular Post willowk December 14, 2018 Popular Post Share December 14, 2018 4 hours ago, iMonrey said: I thought this episode perfectly encapsulated what's wrong with the show. The dialogue was so clunky and so contrived I cringed. That entire scene with Murphy, Frank and Corky sitting around at Phil's reminiscing about the good old days of journalism was like something you'd see in a sixth-grade play, where the characters each stand up and explain the meaning of Thanksgiving to the audience. The story about LBJ saying if he lost Walter Cronkite he lost the country is something I've heard a dozen times in my life. To work that into the dialogue as though it were news to anyone felt so didactic and condescending. I mean, everyone at that table knows that story like the back of their hand . . . why would anyone recite it as though nobody had ever heard it? Too much of what the characters are saying sounds deliberately instructive, it's like they are directly channeling liberal commentary that's so stale and obvious it feels totally unnecessary. I don't need this show to teach me a lesson in civics or state the bleeding obvious about the current administration. I enjoyed the bits with the dog and that's about it - when the script veers off its moralizing agenda it feels more like it used to back in the day. But most of the time, it's objective is about as subtle as a ton of bricks to the head. Know any older folks? They like to reminisce about the old days. And repeat stories. That is how I saw it, a talk between old friends that had the benefit of giving Avery the idea to go overseas to reset his journalistic cred. 27 Link to comment
Popular Post theredhead77 December 14, 2018 Popular Post Share December 14, 2018 (edited) 2 hours ago, Tanichka said: That’s what I’ve been saying! Political is fine, as long as it’s funny, which this show is not. The ‘choir’ wants humor! This member of the 'choir' thinks this show is perfect. 4 hours ago, AntiBeeSpray said: Some of the younger generation may have not. It's not all about your generation (this is meant in a general sense). I can see why it can be viewed that way in terms of the dialogue, but in a way I can see why it needed to be mentioned. History is very soon forgotten. Exactly. 1 hour ago, willowk said: The story about LBJ saying if he lost Walter Cronkite he lost the country is something I've heard a dozen times in my life. To work that into the dialogue as though it were news to anyone felt so didactic and condescending. I mean, everyone at that table knows that story like the back of their hand . . . why would anyone recite it as though nobody had ever heard it? I've never heard that story. Ever. And I'm in my early 40s. 3 hours ago, iMonrey said: Yes but that means the impact of this story will be utterly lost on a generation that has no idea who Walter Cronkite was. Or for that matter, what the Vietnam war was all about. The show is constantly preaching to the choir in an overly obvious, teacher-like manner. The characters are just spitting out things the viewer has already said or thought of themselves, because let's face it, if your politics lean to the right you probably aren't watching this show. Or it will inspire kids to use this new fangled Google thing to research who Cronkite was and what the Vietnam war was all about. Maybe they'll go watch Ken Burns documentary or fall onto one of CNNs decade documentaries and learn something new. I loved this episode. I laughed, I teared up. I love that Avery is going to go search out the story, old skool. Benny will always be a win (DING!). I'm going to be devastated (proverbially) if it doesn't come back for a second season. Edited December 14, 2018 by theredhead77 39 Link to comment
eel2178 December 15, 2018 Share December 15, 2018 7 hours ago, willowk said: Loved Murphy's "I'm bionic" with her 2 hip replacements I've used that at the airport when they try to get me to go through the metal detector instead of the scanner. 10 Link to comment
friendperidot December 15, 2018 Share December 15, 2018 5 hours ago, AntiBeeSpray said: History is very soon forgotten. I was shocked a few years ago when speaking with a young co-worker about my early days living in WDC when she commented that those things were history. History? It's my life! 10 Link to comment
eel2178 December 15, 2018 Share December 15, 2018 20 hours ago, Bronzedog said: I’ve known a couple of people that have trained their dogs to use bells. In both cases, it started out as a house breaking technique and ended with the dog using its owner as its personal butler. Want someone to take you out? Ring the bell! Want attention? Ring the bell! Want someone to fuss over you while trying to figure out what’s wrong? Ring the bell! Etc. I knew someone who did the same with her cats. They had a bell hanging from the front door, and they would ring it if they wanted to go outside. 7 Link to comment
eel2178 December 15, 2018 Share December 15, 2018 5 hours ago, Sarah 103 said: Corky's Monday and Tuesday sweaters reminded me of a 1950s cheerleader for some reason. Remember day-of-the-week underwear? 13 Link to comment
AntiBeeSpray December 15, 2018 Share December 15, 2018 5 hours ago, Kohola3 said: I was at a fundraiser for Honor Flight (takes WWII vets to see their memorial in Washington for free) and a 30 something asked me 1) who the US fought against in WWII and 2) was WWII before or after Vietnam. Appalling and sad to think these world changing wars are so easily forgotten. I bet 90% of those who didn't live those nightmare years of Vietnam have no knowledge of Cronkite and his impact on that war. After all, it wasn't on Facebook or Twitter so how important could it have been? Was fortunate to have teachers who taught us about the Vietnam War, Walter Cronkite and so on, and I still appreciate learning more and more about the history itself. 9 Link to comment
eel2178 December 15, 2018 Share December 15, 2018 29 minutes ago, friendperidot said: I was shocked a few years ago when speaking with a young co-worker about my early days living in WDC when she commented that those things were history. History? It's my life! In high school in 1978, I took 20th Century American History. When we were talking about the Great Depression, my father said, "That isn't history. That's my life," too. 13 Link to comment
theredhead77 December 15, 2018 Share December 15, 2018 55 minutes ago, friendperidot said: I was shocked a few years ago when speaking with a young co-worker about my early days living in WDC when she commented that those things were history. History? It's my life! 23 minutes ago, eel2178 said: In high school in 1978, I took 20th Century American History. When we were talking about the Great Depression, my father said, "That isn't history. That's my life," too. September 11th, 2001 is being taught in history classes now, right? The graduating class of 2019 will be the first high school class that wasn't alive for it. 22 Link to comment
Annber03 December 15, 2018 Share December 15, 2018 8 minutes ago, theredhead77 said: September 11th, 2001 is being taught in history classes now, right? The graduating class of 2019 will be the first high school class that wasn't alive for it. That's weird to think about. Wow. 9 Link to comment
friendperidot December 15, 2018 Share December 15, 2018 Yes, the Great Depression was my parents and my grandparents life. And it had a big effect on my life because I was raised by them. I fix things, I don't throw them out, but my nieces and nephews? Everything is disposable. 13 Link to comment
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